Ten paintings of identical size equally divided by a horizontal line defining two rectangles: The format cut in separate pictorial fields with the canvas left unprimed, alternatingly above or below the horizontal line. Painted in heavy impasto on top of primed, raw and coloured grounds, words with reference to painting’s theoretical framework and physical presence are distributed. Next to concepts related to mythology and painterly problematics, various pigments and solvents, occasionally even number of staples used, are listed. This juxtaposition of generic technical information with poetic descriptions seem to destabilize dichtonomies based on form and content.

In his last show Originals Grisaille, Elgin presented emphatic repetitions of early modernist works next to grey-scale versions of the same. In the present show Mirror falling from the Wall this split image is played out in singular works evoking pre-modernist repetitive strategies. In Ovid’s Metamorphosis, particularly in the figure of Echo, transformation is frequently a consequence of repetition. In Mirror falling from the Wall, the repeated format with its linear division echoes the divided structure and exact measurements (110×92 cm) of Caravaggio’s Narcissus. Rather than continuing modernism’s critique of repetition, painting’s narcissistic self-obsession and auto-erotic character is played out here. Painting’s alleged self-absorption offers an unexpected visual encounter in the blind-zone of the mirror; repetition as a strategy for invention.

Dag Erik Elgin’s work is informed by an ongoing investigation into the history of painting, modernist ideals and contemporary visual culture. He is concerned with establishing a practice where the specific physical qualities of painting, historical analysis and personal production are constantly negotiated. Recent projects like Mirror falling from the Wall, Originals Grisaille and La Collection Moderne introduce text based works and repetitive strategies as catalysts for exploring modernism’s ongoing affair with current cultural and aesthetic representations. A parallel production of texts accompanies the visual investigations, e.g. “Preparing for Painting to Happen” in: Josef Albers: no tricks, no twinkling of the eyes -Verlag der Buchhandlung Walter König, Cologne 2014 and “p.p. Provenance Painted” in: Looters, Smugglers, and Collectors: Provenance
Research and the Market – Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther König, Cologne, 2015.

The following conversation between Rebecca Ackroyd and Vincent Honoré, Director and Chief Curator at David Roberts Art Foundation, London, took place in August 2017.

VH: You graduated in 2015. Your work changed of lot since then. Can you explain how?
RA: I feel like last year I had a sudden feeling of complete despair and disconnection with what was going on in this country… And thinking about my work: What is this doing? Why am I doing this? What purpose has this got? What is this doing for me now at this point in history and time? I wanted to push the work into a different space and create some works that were more politically direct.
VH: How was the Outpost show political?
RA: As you entered the space there was a huge print of women’s crotch, it filled the wall and had these hairy gorilla hands grabbing the crotch. I wanted it to be inescapable and become almost like a billboard.
VH: Was it referring to Donald Trump?
RA: Yes, and suddenly feeling for the first time really annoyed and angry … well not for the first time, but I suppose it felt like all the under currents of misogyny and racism were being given the green light to be more vocal, in the UK as well. It made me feel incredibly alienated, it made me think about what I wanted my work to be doing, and how I wanted to engage. At the same time not wanting to make a practice that’s about politics because for me that’s not particularly rewarding. I wanted to make works that are engaging in what I’m feeling at the moment. I just felt like: ‘Where am I in this situation?’ In a funny way the Outpost show almost became a dissection of me.
VH: All these elements: feminism, class systems, politics merged with some clear autobiographical references were already in your work before that.
RA: It wasn’t like I reinvented the work, it was almost like I just had to re-evaluate what my approach was to it, and how to make it more specific. I felt there was so much change in the space of two years that it would be disingenuous to keep making and not somehow reflect on it.
VH: This image of the gorilla hands makes me think a lot of the sarcasm present in the very feminist image of the beer exploding by Sarah Lucas… and all the sudden I have a question, something I never thought before about your work… Do you consider yourself as a British artist? You work could be positioned in a tradition of the YBAs in many ways (from its materials to its themes), and the tradition of the punk culture, maybe.
RA: I never thought about being British, and it wasn’t something I considered in my work, and then with the Brexit vote it became inescapable. In the Outpost show I wanted to make direct references to an idea of ‘Britishness’ by covering the floor with a pub carpet. It was very much referencing an idea of a masculine, boozing, binge drinking, cheap drinking kind of culture that’s so specific to England, or a stereotype of it anyway. I wanted it to provide a landscape for the other works, that were more personal, to nestle on.
VH: Nobody ever mentioned Sarah Lucas about your work. The works are different, however you share something about the female body being exposed as a subject of desire and not only as an object of desire.
RA: Yes, I think she’s someone that I’ve always looked at in terms of her attitude and the way she reinvents things… I was really interested in her directness because she doesn’t let you escape when you’re looking at her work: you’re very confronted with it.
VH: She once told me that she believes a work is finished only when she can have a good laugh with it. That’s something you share: humour in the work.
RA: I think that’s something I let into the work through letting more of myself into it…being able to have fun with what you’re making and allow it to go into uncomfortable or unexplainable territories.
VH: You are now exposing yourself more?
RA: Yes, exactly, in a way making those shutter pieces in the ‘Carrier’ series; using the tops of them as a place to make collage is almost like being able to put whatever content I want onto the work. So they already have a formal content, echoing an urban doorway or window, but then plastering imagery on to them gives them another layer of meaning and places them in a different space or time.
VH: Something interesting in your work is this bipolarity between opacity (like the blinds and the walls) and transparency – being able to go inside, the rib cages, being able to go through all the system of the ventilation grids.
RA: I’m interested in what you can reveal or hide in a work and how it can direct or obstruct a space or where it might lead beyond the gallery. The shutters are like full stops or ruptures in the fragility of other works, they’re impenetrable. The figurative sculpture that’s going to Norway, has perspex windows cast into different places in the body. It’s hollow so you see through the limbs and see it’s shell and it resembles a church like building while also a reclining body basking itself.
VH: Do you consider yourself a sculptor, a painter or, maybe, an architect? I am mentioning architecture, Not only because of the large sculptures the environment you created, but even when I experience one of your drawings, I feel it is an architecture, an environment in itself.
RA: When I set the work up in a show is when I can locate it within a context and build meaning, and for this the environment is key and thinking beyond the gallery. It’s important for me to be able to move across different ways of making without limits so I don’t really categorise what I do. I suppose it’s an interest I have in transporting an object or an image beyond the realm of familiarity and into something more uncanny or uncomfortable.
VH: One can find some references… references may not be the right word but one can link your drawings to Lee Lozano or to Phillip Guston.
RA: Yes, exactly. I don’t plan any drawings, they just come out and they just flow in a way. I hadn’t shown them until recently and they’re strange to me, as I can’t explain where they’re coming from or even know how to talk about them, they’re so ‘other’ to me.
VH: Each time I see one of your exhibitions I am fascinated by the fact that my position as a viewer is not the position of a spectator, and the work is not an object. I am with a creature, with something that is living, with an organism that is moving although it is not moving. It is absolutely fascinating, the way you position the works – you miss-position them, you make them alive in a very specific way.
RA: When I install a show the process of setting the tone of the room is key in how the works are activated and where they come alive. It’s as much about where I’m installing it as where I’m pointing out to, the spaces and experiences beyond. With the show at Outpost I didn’t want it to feel like a gallery, I wanted it to be dark, I wanted a carpet on the floor that was really distracting and vulgar, and located the works somewhere else to shift the environment from one thing to another. It makes me feel very uncomfortable to think about this show now because there so many weird decisions that I made, but I think that’s what gives it a feeling of restlessness; it’s slippy.
VH: Funnily enough people are mentioning, when writing about your work, Louise Bourgeois and Rosemarie Trockel. I would rather refer to Sarah Lucas and Robert Rauschenberg.
RA: I guess all of those people have influences on me but I suppose I’m more interested in Bourgeois and Trockel and in the trajectory of them in the way that their practices constantly shift and morph into new territories in a limitless and unapologetic way.
VH: Bourgeois was changing her practice every five to ten years. Is that something you want to do?
RA: I don’t really think about it in that way, my work will always shift and respond to what’s happening around me. It’s important for me that I’m making things that feel relevant to my experiences and that will ultimately always be unpredictable and changing.
VH: Do you think the exhibitions in Berlin and in Stavanger will mark a change?
RA: In some ways maybe but I think they reflect a development rather than a shift away from past ideas. The shutter works are similar to some works that I made five or six years ago but at this point in time they have different connotations, to me, they talk very specifically about now or my experiences now.
VH: Have you used black before?
RA: I used to use a lot of graphite in my work. With these works in particular I wanted them to be tonally very sombre and stripped back, in stark contrast to other works where I’ve used a more playful palette. For the shutters the seeming heaviness is important as I want to emphasise the end of something or the shutting down and blocking out.
VH: In your work, there’s a lot of thresholds with transient moments, the keyhole, the windows, even the legs – they are oversized so you go between the legs… they are doorways…
RA: Yeah, they allow a glimpse into another time or place that I want to echo familiarity while staying on the edge of what’s real. Either in the formal content or how I set the works up in a space I want there to be a sense of restlessness, or not belonging.
VH: You are basically out of the studio for the first time in a month. How do you work? Do you work every day or do need to have an exhibition to produce works?
RA: If I’ve got an exhibition then I work all day, every day but even when I don’t I spend most of my time there. I work best by making through things so it’s important to be a bit disciplined about going.
VH: Do you make the works yourself?
RA: Mostly, I have someone who does my metalwork for me but often through making I discover new processes or often things shift from what initially think they’ll be. Sometimes whole bodies of work have emerged through an accident in the studio.
VH: I can see a lot of experimentations and chance going into the work, and being a major factor of creation.
RA: There are chance encounters when I’m making something and finding new processes is an exciting and important part of my work but then this is given shape and direction, so the work isn’t about a process or intuition. I make a lot of things I don’t ever show, ideas that don’t work and get discarded because they I don’t feel they say or do enough.
VH: I sometimes think about Philip Guston when seeing your work
RA: I often think about his bravery when he shifted back to working figuratively, he really carved something out for himself. The abstract expressionists’ works reflect a historical movement but when you look at Guston’s work, it’s on a completely different level, and in a completely different world. I think I really was excited when I first saw his works.
VH: I mentioned a few artists. One can position your works in a lineage, yet they still don’t know what they are.
RA: Yes, exactly. I think they reflect an openness, you need to be open enough to let things into the work and flow through it, rather than trying to confine it into being one thing.
VH: It must be terrorizing, isn’t it? To create works like that…
RA: For the artist? Yes, it can be. I think that’s why I don’t always like talking about it, I feel like I’m about to slip up and everyone’s about to realize that I have no idea what I’m doing. Even though, when I’m in the studio, I feel like: ‘This is what I’m doing.’ I’m so certain of it and I don’t question it. I’ve started to understand that this is part of my process though and often not knowing means something unexpected can happen, it’s the risk.
VH: Do you never retouch the work, change the work?
RA: I do sometimes if it’s going into a solo show or something I might change it in the space.
VH: What about separating you from your work? Them going away, being sold or being shown in group shows without you installing them. How does it feel to let them go? I had this conversation with Miriam Cahn who told me that she was very happy for the work to go because then she could start the next process.
RA: I think that’s it. I never feel that weird about it because I start making something else. I never really have a time to dwell on it but then sometimes I get a bit of heartache about letting a work go and feel like I want to keep it all, but once I’m involved in a new body of work I look ahead at where it’s going next. For me the previous works act as gateways into new works and inform the next ideas it’s a shifting body that doesn’t sleep.

Galleri Opdahl is proud to present the exhibition Drain by Rebecca Ackroyd. This will be the artists first solo exhibition with the gallery after taking part in the group show Opals, curated by Vincent Honoré in 2016. Galleri Opdahl is also very pleased to announce a solo presentation of the artists at Art Berlin, September 14-17th, 2017.

An interview with Rebecca Ackroyd by Vincent Honoré about her body of work will be made available 6th of September.Rebecca Ackroyd (b. 1987, Cheltenham, UK) lives and works in London. She graduated from the Royal Academy Schools in 2015 after completing her BA in Fine Art at Byam Shaw School of Art in 2010.

Ackroyd has shown her work in solo exhibitions at Outpost Gallery, Norwich, Hunter/Whitfield. London (2015), Kinman Gallery, London (2014) and Marsden Woo Gallery, London (2013). Recent group exhibitions in 2015-2017 include: These Rotten Words, Chapter Gallery, Cardiff, curated by George Vasey (2017), Sara Zanin Gallery, Rome (2017), House of Voltaire – Studio Voltaire, London (2016), Nomadic Vitrine-Recent Activity, Eastside Projects, Birmingham (2016), All Over, Studio Leigh, London (2016, )Modest Villa Immense Versailles (co-curator), Kinman Gallery, London (2016); At Home Salon: Double Acts, Marcelle Joseph Projects, Ascot; Bloody Life, Herald St, London (2016);Is it heavy or is it light, Assembly Point, London (2016); With institutions like these, Averard Hotel, London (2016); Opals, Galerie Opdahl, Stavanger, Norway, curated by Vincent Honoré (2016); Royal Academy Schools Degree Show, London; Works in Residence, David Roberts Art Foundation, London; and The London Open, Whitechapel Gallery, London. In 2013, her work was included in Bloomberg New Contemporaries (ICA, London and Spike Island, Bristol).
Upcoming exhibitions 2017; Zabludowicz invites, London

‘Apparent across all elements of Kox’s practice is the presence of tensile stress; often emphasised through varying degrees of an object’s abnormality and as an inherent tenet of the material itself. By way of manipulation the different techniques and processes she employs in the making of her sculptures ensure that they assume a degree of patent and self-evident agency, whilst testing the limitations of what is considered visually acceptable. Simultaneously expanding upon the boundaries of our perceptions, as much as she does the material with which she works. In this way Kox plays a game of material hyperbole, assessing the nature of matter through the principles of liminality.’ (Dani Admiss)

Born in 1984 in Frankfurt/Main, Germany, Vera Kox studied at Goldsmiths College, London and currently lives and works in Berlin and Luxemburg. In 2017 she will be participating in the exhibition ‘Flatland / abstractions narratives #2’, curated by Marianne Derrien and Sarah Ihler-Meyer which opens at MUDAM in Luxemburg on October 6th 2017.
The artist’s first solo exhibition at Galleri Opdahl will take place November 3rd, 2017.
Full bio at www.galleriopdal.no

Galleri Opdahl is proud to present the American painter John Zurier’s first solo exhibition in Norway.

John Zurier was born in 1956 in Santa Monica, California and earned his MFA in Fine Arts from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1983. He has since taught at the Californa College of the Arts. He currently lives and works in Berkeley, California.

Zurier participated in the 30th São Paulo Biennial in São Paulo, Brazil (2012), the California Biennial at the Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach, CA (2010) and the Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY (2002). His work has been exhibited widely in solo-exhibitions both in the US as well as Europe and is part of numerous public collections such as the Berkeley Art Museum, University of California and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He has exhibited with Galerie Nordenhake in Berlin and Stockholm numerous times, most recently with the exhibition «East» in Berlin. This will be his first exhibition in Norway.